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Universal Music Group Plans to Save $270M Per Year With ‘Organizational Redesign,’ Layoffs
Universal Music plans layoffs as part of a structure "redesign" for cost savings on its earnings call, saying it will save the company $271 million.
Things then came into clearer focus on Feb. 1, when Grainge announced in an internal memo that Universal would be restructuring its label operations, adopting a loose East Coast-West Coast operation wherein Republic Records co-founder/CEO Monte Lipman would begin to oversee Republic, Def Jam, Island and Mercury, and Interscope Geffen A&M chairman/CEO John Janick would take responsibility for Interscope, Geffen, Capitol, Motown, Priority, Verve and Blue Note. On Feb. 7, Warner Music Group (WMG) announced simultaneously that it had just recorded its best quarter in its history and would also be laying off 10% of its staff, or some 600 people, and offloading its owned and operated media properties in an effort to save around $200 million that it said it would reinvest in the company. That itself came less than a year after then-new WMG CEO Robert Kyncl announced a 4% staff reduction, affecting some 270 people, “in order to set us up for long-term success.” Cuts at other large record companies are also expected, sources say.
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